Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 3rd Jan 2013 21:23 UTC, submitted by Adurbe
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There are a lot of rational reasons to hate Unity
I can't think of any. "I don't like it", "It doesn't work the way I want" etc etc are perfectly good reasons but also very subjective.
especially on low end machines
So don't run it on low end machines. It wasn't designed to run on those, we have Xubuntu and Lubuntu for that.
"There are a lot of rational reasons to hate Unity
I can't think of any. "I don't like it", "It doesn't work the way I want" etc etc are perfectly good reasons but also very subjective. "
Performance is subjective?
"especially on low end machines
So don't run it on low end machines. It wasn't designed to run on those, we have Xubuntu and Lubuntu for that. "
But it was, until they added Unity (and subsequently got rid of the netbook version). Sure I could try Xubuntu or Lubuntu but Mint runs fine on my Atom 330/2GB system so I'm not going back.




Member since:
2012-09-21
There are a lot of rational reasons to hate Unity, especially on low end machines. Innovation is fine, not being able to turn it off when it inhibits productivity is not.